Page:Macbethandkingr00kembgoog.djvu/33

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

[18]

opposition, hand to hand? Why does he call him brave, and emphatically insist on his deserving that name?

    wards, which went through his teeth: next I was attacked by a foot-soldier," &c.

    The Battle of Waterloo, containing the Series of Accounts published by Authority, British and Foreign, &c. By a Near Observer. 8vo. p. 27. 8th Edit. 1816. London.

    Not to dwell longer, where there ought to have been no occasion for stopping at all;—if these commentators had only figured to themselves the Caledonian warrior, burying his dirk in the bowels of Macdonwald and ripping up the body of the inhuman rebel, they would, perhaps, have seen that the old reading is extremely good sense; and not have had to answer for inveigling many very well-meaning publishers of Shakspeare into their party, by the artful expedient of telling them, that to unseam an enemy, is English for chopping off his head.